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sue4e3

(731 posts)
Fri Jan 8, 2016, 11:28 AM Jan 2016

A Study Points to the Importance of Seeking New Pine Varieties Resistant to Climate Change

The radiata pine is the tree species par excellence in the Basque Country's forests. Like other types of pine, the lack of water is one of the factors having the greatest effect on its survival and productivity. Until now, the Basque Country's high, steady rainfall has encouraged the cultivation and good productivity of this species. This situation could change over the coming years if, in line with the predictions of climate change, average temperatures rise and droughts become more frequent and intense. So, new varieties of the radiata pine that are more resistant to the effects of climate change will have to be introduced. It is significant that the Basque Country's radiata pine should have been one of the ecotypes that has suffered most from the lack of water.

Introducing varieties of radiata pine that withstand drought better would not have any negative repercussions on the biodiversity existing in the Basque Country, as it would simply be a case of substituting one variety for another. The research has a significant repercussion for the timber industry in the Basque Country, as the radiata pine is one of its main crops due to the high productivity and quality of its timber. The sector can take into consideration the most suitable varieties within its programmes for improvement.

In order to simulate the anticipated scenario of an increased water shortage and its impact on the survival of forestland, Nuria De Diego, a PhD holder thanks to a grant provided by the Department for the Environment, Spatial Planning, Agriculture and Fisheries of the Government of the Basque Autonomous Community, together with specialists from Neiker-Tecnalia and the Department of Plant Biology and Ecology of the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country, have evaluated the response to situations of water stress of various ecotypes or varieties of radiata pine from different climate and geographical zones worldwide. The study carried out has been defended under the title: Respuesta a la sequía de Pinus radiata D. Don y su implicación en los procesos de tolerancia (Response to drought of Pinus radiata D. Don and its implications for tolerance processes). Part of the research done by De Diego is due to be published shortly in one of the most important journals existing on forestry: Tree Physiology.

In this study, apart from working with the radiata pine native to the Basque Country, other ecotypes from Australia and New Zealand were also used. The different varieties were exposed to a drought cycle of one month and were rehydrated to assess their capacity to recover. They were then subjected to a second cycle without water to see whether their behaviour response to the lack of water in fact improved due to the hardening of the plants. After the second cycle, the research confirmed that all the varieties had become more drought tolerant, their resistance ranging between seven and eleven weeks, depending on the varieties used. What explains the greater drought tolerance of the radiata pine that has been subjected to water stress beforehand is the fact that the pine manages to develop various defence mechanisms in this situation, like an increase in osmotic adjustment, greater stability in cell membranes, and even a reduction in the transpiration rate; these are processes regulated by various hormonal signals which also varied across the different ecotypes.

Within the varieties studied, the research detected that the Basque Country's radiata pine ecotype was among the ones that displayed the least drought tolerance and hardening capacity. This low capacity for adaptation leads one to think that an upsurge in the atmospheric conditions brought about by climate change will cause a large proportion of the Basque Country's pinewood stocks to sustain considerable damage.

http://www.sciencenewsline.com/news/2012041914370017.html

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